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Diverging Pathways follows the careers of a British birth cohort
into early adulthood, presenting a detailed picture of the family
backgrounds and the school and early labour force achievements of
the cohort. The study portrays how the social arrangements of
society's institutions deflect people's achievement patterns.
Different kinds of schools, ability groups within schools, and
differences between industries and firms lead comparable
individuals to achieve at very different levels in society and the
book shows that the cumulative effects of being placed in
advantaged or disadvantaged locations make their achievements
highly divergent in adulthood. The study reports on major career
differences between men and women and describes how the interface
between post-secondary education and the labour force alters some
of the outcomes of elementary and secondary schooling.
In this book some of the leading stratification scholars in the
U.S. present empirical and theoretical essays about the
institutional contexts that shape careers. Building on recent
advances in theory, data, and analytic technique, the essays in
this volume work toward the goal of identifying and assessing the
processes by which a birth cohort is d
This book provides evidence of the significance of a society's
structure and normative definitions in giving shape to one part of
the life course, examining closely a major period of life course
transition, the move from adolescence to adulthood in Great
Britain.
This book provides evidence of the significance of a society's
structure and normative definitions in giving shape to one part of
the life course, examining closely a major period of life course
transition, the move from adolescence to adulthood in Great
Britain.
The transition of British secondary schools from predominantly
selective to predominantly comprehensive started with the issuing
of Circular 10/65 by the Department of Education and Science under
a Labour government in 1965. The intention was to transform a
highly stratified system into a more equal one. However, this study
shows that the new system was in fact highly diverse and retained
features of the selective system, thus preserving the middle-class
advantage into the comprehensive era. This overview draws on a
range of sources, including information collected from the National
Child Development Study of pupils born in 1958.
In this book some of the leading stratification scholars in the
U.S. present empirical and theoretical essays about the
institutional contexts that shape careers. Building on recent
advances in theory, data, and analytic technique, the essays in
this volume work toward the goal of identifying and assessing the
processes by which a birth cohort is distributed in the
stratification system, given their positions of origin in that
system. Alan Kerckhoff's introduction situates the studies in this
volume within the context of previous stratification research over
several generations, making the book an invaluable resource for
scholars and graduate students.
Diverging Pathways follows the careers of a British birth cohort
into early adulthood, presenting a detailed picture of the family
backgrounds and the school and early labour force achievements of
the cohort. The study portrays how the social arrangements of
society's institutions deflect people's achievement patterns.
Different kinds of schools, ability groups within schools, and
differences between industries and firms lead comparable
individuals to achieve at very different levels in society and the
book shows that the cumulative effects of being placed in
advantaged or disadvantaged locations make their achievements
highly divergent in adulthood. The study reports on major career
differences between men and women and describes how the interface
between post-secondary education and the labour force alters some
of the outcomes of elementary and secondary schooling.
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